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What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research?

What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research?. Bren Neale University of Leeds Timescapes QL Initiative. What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research? . Qualitative enquiry conducted through or in relation to time

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What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research?

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  1. What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research? Bren Neale University of Leeds Timescapes QL Initiative

  2. What is Qualitative Longitudinal Research? Qualitative enquiry conducted through or in relation to time Explores the temporal dimension of experience: change, continuity, endurance, transition, causality Produces distinctive forms of knowledge

  3. Qualitative Enquiry… • Generates rich, detailed, textured data about individuals and linked lives, using an array of interview and ethnographic methods • Discerns human agency, social practices, subjective experience, identities, beliefs, emotions, values and so on • Derives meanings from context and complexity • Produces finely grained understandings • Addresses how and why questions: has significant explanatory power

  4. Conducted through/in relation to time. Sheds light on micro processes and the causes and consequences of change or continuity in the social world; Illuminates how change is created, lived and experienced Works at the interface of agency and structure, the personal and social, the micro and macro dimensions of experience –for the relationship is essentially a dynamic one. We cannot hope to understand society unless we have a prior understanding of the relationship between biography and history (C Wright Mills The Sociological Imagination).

  5. Conceptualising Time. ‘Longitudinal data …offers a movie rather than a snapshot’ (Berthoud 2000: Seven years in the Lives of British Families: 15)

  6. Quantitative Concepts of Time Large scale panel and cohort studies: time is linear, cumulative and invariably moving forward: time emerges as chronology, sequence, duration and interval for example, research that measures the spells of time that individuals spend in particular states (eg. unemployment or cohabitation (Leisering and Walker The Dynamics of Modern Society 2000) time is linked to trend data: generates the long shot, birds eye view, the broad vista: the epic movie

  7. Qualitative Concepts of Time Complex flows of time – Timescapes of our lives. Time is fluid, multi-dimensional and infinitely varied. e.g. may encompass biographical time (individual turning points, critical moments); generational time, historical time, industrial time, cyclical time: time as a social construct (Adam, Haraven) Time is linked to the textures of real lives: generates close ups of individuals and groups, the twists and turns in the story lines – the intricacies and interior logic of human lives – the personal movie

  8. Imagining the Temporal Biographical research: Turning Points, Critical Moments, epiphanies: not only that individuals or groups move from point a to b but what triggers a change in direction and what is the nature of the journey on the way. Past, present future, the past as a subjective resource, role of memory, aspirations for the future as we overwrite our biographies. The future as a key site for research (Barbara Adam) Timescales (lemke): exploring the pace of change, how we sustain things or bide our time. Chronotopes (Timespace) Bakhtin (1981 [1938]): The intrinsic connectedness of temporal and spatial relationships. intersection of where and when as the key mechanism for grasping the significance and meaning of events

  9. Research Design: Craft of QL research • Prospective longitudinalstudies, tracking individuals or groups over time ‘walking alongside’ people as their lives unfold: extensive tracking (seven up series). Flexibility, creativity and innovation used through the research process: allowing findings from one wave to inform the next (Smith 2005). • Retrospective studies (e.g life history research that charts changes in a life up to the present). • Repeat cross sectional studies, revisiting or continuous research in a community or organisation, that may or may not involve the same individuals • Mixed designs, that combine prospective and retrospective, or that link QL with QNL data, combining breadth and depth of data to enrich analysis and generate robust evidence.

  10. How to build time into research design • How long does a study have to be to qualify as QL? What are the best time intervals for follow up? • There is no one right length of time or time interval for data collection - the longitudinal reach of a study, and how it is conducted through time depends on the nature of the research questions • Intensive tracking through an organisational process (eg hospital admission); tracking through a life course transition, eg marrying, giving birth, extensive tracking over decades to discern changing life styles, practices, attitudes and values.

  11. Practical Applications • Life course transitions – growing up, becoming a parent, death and bereavement, transforming relationships • Long term field research in communities or organisations • Tracking target populations through particular processes eg. schooling, probation, those in receipt of specialist support, interventions or benefits • Evaluation research for public and third sector initiatives or infrastructure for public services (dynamics of transport) • Monitoring, navigating processes of change management, taking stock as part of the process- knowledge mediation between research and policy and practice.

  12. Challenges: Data generation • Challenges of maintaining a sample over time; relies on sustaining relationships, and developing strategies for sample boosting • Data collection tends to be eclectic at outset because it is impossible to know what data might be significant over time. Funnel approach needed. • QL research generates very large data sets, viewed longitudinally. • Data may always have a provisional feel, as data collection may go on indefinitely • The value of a QL data set may take years to accrue, particularly its historical value

  13. Challenges: Data Analysis • Data analysis is complex and time consuming • Proceeds in two dimensions simultaneously • Analysis of cross sectional data: each point in time • Analysis of longitudinal data within each case: production of case profiles and case histories • An iteration between the two: understanding where lives converge or diverge. • Tools for analysis: framework (Lewis) Life history charts (Gray).

  14. Challenges: Ethical considerations • Ethical challenges of qualitative enquiry enhanced where long term relationships exist between researcher and researched • Confidentiality • Informed consent as ongoing process • Researcher/researched relationship affects both over time • QL data needs specialist curation: stakeholder approach balancing data protection with data sharing.

  15. The power of QL research • A powerful tool for knowing and understanding the social world in a different way, understanding the interior logic of lives, discovering the unimaginable. • Can address some of the grand challenges of social science in a world of rapid social change. • Seeing things qualitatively through the lens of time ‘quite simply changes everything’ (Barbara Adam)

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